384 NA TURE-STUDY REVIEW 



— The Sea-Gull (The silenced song of unrest 



of wave and wing.) 

 — Stonn-Waves and Fog on Dorr's Point, 

 Ben Harbor. (Rich in imagery) 

 Song — My Heart's in the Highlands (use with the Hill and 



Mountain urge.) 

 Abbott— Notes of the Night. 

 Carmen — Poems. 



Burroughs — Bow in the Clouds. (Country Life 22:24) 

 Burroughs— Hay-bam Idyl (Atlantic 112:530) 

 Burroughs — ^Animal Wit Indoors and Out (Atlantic 109:196) 

 Illustrate all of above material with paintings of out-of-door 

 scenes, and with such music as comes from MacDowell, "In 

 Autumn," "To a Water-Lily," "A Deserted Farm," "Told 

 at Sunset," etc. 

 Double Nature of Man. 



Make this a separate project in the years work. Take up 

 Stevenson's "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," as a basis for the study. 

 Use Barnard's, "I Feel Two Natures Struggling Within Me." 

 Bring in the Bible stories of temptation as suggestion of the sort 

 of myths which have grown up around this figure of the two natures. 

 Use music which has two themes playing into each other and 

 struggling. Kreisler's, "Caprice Viennois" shows in part what 

 I mean by the musical illustration of the double nature. 

 Art Studies. 



Markham — The Man with the Hoe. 



— The Sower (Illustrate with Millet's painting and 

 Polasek's statue, "The Sower." Then bring in 

 Millet's, "Gleaners," and other pictures 

 dealing with the fields, thus completing the 

 whole song of the grain. 

 Prayer can be used as a study. I would let the instructor 

 select what he thinks best here. For simple child prayers, Rey- 

 nold's "Child praying" is excellent. For some of the noble 

 prayers of leaders, other illustrations will have to be found. 

 And for the simple prayer of common folks, use Millet's, "The 

 Angelus," and in music, Massenet's, "Thais." 

 Idealization. 



